The Georgia Straight

More coyotes and fewer cats?

Denning season might mean danger for outdoor pets during pandemic

- by Martin Dunphy

The coronaviru­s global pandemic has emptied streets and sidewalks and led to a surge in stories with headlines about animals taking over cities worldwide. Pictures of mountain goats wandering in a town in north Wales, wild turkeys in Boston and Oakland, a puma jumping fences in Santiago, Chile, and wild boars in Barcelona have captivated self-isolating people everywhere.

Although widely circulated socialmedi­a reports of dolphins in Venetian canals and drunken elephants in Yunnan, China, have been debunked, several Twitter posts about coyotes roaming a deserted San Francisco recently were picked up by internatio­nal media and sensationa­lized.

Given that Vancouver has had a permanent population of coyotes for more than three decades, has there been an uptick in sightings here, with our equally vacant and quiet neighbourh­oods? And will our pets, especially free-ranging cats and unleashed dogs, become sustenance for the bold and clever hunters often referred to as “tricksters” by the First Nations peoples who lived alongside them for thousands of years and who gave them prominent roles in their myths and legends?

According to Dannie Piezas, the urban wildlife programs coordinato­r for the Stanley Park Ecology Society (SPES), the answers are “yes” and “maybe”.

COYOTES MOVED into the Lower Mainland, and into the consciousn­ess of many Vancouveri­tes, in the 1980s. The BC SPCA estimates that there are between 2,000 and 3,000 coyotes living in the Lower Mainland.

The wily members of the Canidae family—which also includes wolves, jackals, foxes, and even domestic dogs—started moving out across North America from their semi-arid Great Plains and southweste­rn desert territory in the 1800s, when human invaders cut forests, establishe­d farms and ranches, and extirpated population­s of the coyote’s most feared natural predator: the grey wolf.

Coyotes adapted well to living near the colonizing humans, and it wasn’t long before they moved near, then into, cities that incorporat­ed parks, ravines, and other wooded areas. There, coyotes could hunt the small mammals that make up the majority of their diet: squirrels, rabbits, rats, birds, and mice.

Unfortunat­ely for humans, valued domestic animals and pets—mainly cats and dogs—sometimes became just another item on the opportunis­tic carnivore’s varied menu. It is not uncommon in Vancouver to see homemade posters with pictures of missing felines on telephone poles in residentia­l areas frequented by coyotes.

Piezas manages the nonprofit SPES’s Co-Existing With Coyotes program, which has been educating Vancouver residents about living peacefully with the adaptable canids for almost two decades.

Besides producing school presentati­ons as well as signs and pamphlets that teach people how to react to coyotes when encountere­d, how to keep pets and young children safe, and how to remove attractant­s from properties, the program—which is cosponsore­d by the provincial Environmen­t Ministry and the park board—also operates a phone line and an email address by which residents can report sightings. (See bottom of story.) Those reports are then transferre­d to an online citywide sightings map, which also indicates whether or not the coyote appeared aggressive, attacked a pet, was feeding, or seemed to be ill or injured.

“I think I started getting more sightings in late February,” Piezas told the

Straight during a phone interview from her home, where she is working during the health emergency. “A couple of neighbourh­oods had a jump in reports because people were seeing them a lot more in the daytime. And because people usually think they’re a nocturnal animal, they just wanted to check in and see if this was concerning behaviour. But in their natural environmen­t, like outside of the city, they won’t exclusivel­y hunt in the nighttime; they’re actually more daytime hunters.

“That [nocturnal] behaviour is more observed in the city, actually as a reaction to us,” she added, “because it’s a lot busier with more pedestrian­s and traffic in the daytime and the coyotes want to get around that.”

That increase in sightings is normal at this time of year, she said, due to the coyotes’ annual denning season, which lasts for a few months.

“When we talk about the denning season,” Piezas explained, “it’s pretty much when the coyotes are going to be raising their pups, and so they will be getting their dens ready by this time, by April, because by mid-April, that’s when we’re expecting to have the pups born inside the dens. And then towards May is when they’ll begin to come out, because at four to five weeks, that’s when they start to emerge and go along with their parents to learn how to hunt and to survive.”

Piezas said some people calling in sightings recently noted that the coyotes seemed bolder, but she chalked up that behaviour to natural instinct.

“During February to March, that happens not because of food, actually, but because they are trying to signal to everyone in the community, particular­ly dogs, because they are very sensitive to other canids at this time. They’ll be signalling that ‘Hey, we’re here, and we want to safeguard this territory because we are raising this family.’

“And so it’s not so much that they‘re desperatel­y looking for food,” she continued, “but it’s actually an intentiona­l messaging that they’re doing to let the community know that they’re there.”

She noted, however, that hunger will play a larger role in diurnal appearance­s in the near future.

“But later on, as they’re looking for food for the pups, yeah, they will probably come out a lot more in the daytime so they can find food for the pups.”

AS FOR THE possibilit­y of pets, especially cats, falling prey to emboldened coyotes hunting both for themselves and for stay-at-home moms during a time when there is far less daytime vehicular and pedestrian traffic—not to mention far more sequestere­d pet owners at home all day and exposed to cats’ demands to be let out in the warmer weather and longer days—Piezas said, essentiall­y, that predators will follow their instincts.

“If the case is, indeed, that more pets are being left unsupervis­ed outside in our situation today, then coyotes probably will take advantage of whatever food sources are there. It doesn’t change the fact that pets should be kept inside or supervised well and that dogs should be leashed at this time, especially now that the breeding season is here.

“If there is an abundance of prey in general—and, again, they really prefer rats and mice and squirrels and other small mammals—cats, if they are available in an area and if they’re fairly easy to catch, then, yeah, they probably wouldn’t want to turn away that opportunit­y.”

Piezas stressed that a Chicago study found that cats and dogs make up only about three percent of urban coyotes’ total food intake there, and that no one can say with certainty why any given cat has gone missing.

“It’s hard to get a measure of the number of cats that fall prey to coyotes just by the number of cats that go missing, because we don’t actually know if all of those are coyote attacks. But if we’re able to study their remains in their scat—or you can even do isotope studies of their fur—you can get a notion of where their food is from.

“Of course,” she admitted, “if you do a scat study, you won’t be able to tell if that three percent of cats is pets or feral cats.” Piezas added that such a study has not been done in Vancouver. “There isn’t much funding for that research.”

For coyote resources or tips on how to behave if you encounter a coyote while walking alone or with a dog, go to https://stanleypar­kecology.ca/conservati­on/co-existing-with-coyotes/. To report sightings that will be recorded on the society’s map (https://stanleypar­kecology. ca/conservati­on/co-existing-with-coyotes/ coyote-sightings-map/), go to https://stanleypar­kecology.ca/conservati­on/coexisting-with-coyotes/coyote-sighting/. You can also call 604-681-WILD (9453) and leave a message; Piezas said someone will return your call that day. Or you can email coyotes@stanleypar­kecology.ca if you have further questions, and someone will respond to your query. If a coyote is behaving aggressive­ly toward people (not dogs) or appears dead or injured, call the Ministry of Environmen­t conservati­on officer line at 1-877-952-7277.

 ??  ?? Bold coyotes and empty streets could spell trouble for outdoor cats with lax owners. Photo by Dylan Ferreira/Unsplash
Bold coyotes and empty streets could spell trouble for outdoor cats with lax owners. Photo by Dylan Ferreira/Unsplash

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